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Lagos Closes Eko Bridge Indefinitely for Emergency Safety Repairs

Claudia Kane
· · 2 min read
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Eko Bridge Lagos — outbound carriageway closed indefinitely for emergency structural repairs May 2026

The Lagos State Government has shut down the outbound lane of Eko Bridge indefinitely, beginning Tuesday, May 12, 2026. The closure is for emergency safety investigations and structural repairs. There is no timeline yet for when it will reopen.

What’s Closing and What’s Not

Lagos State Commissioner for Transportation, Oluwaseun Osiyemi, announced the closure on Sunday, confirming that only the outbound carriageway (the lane heading toward Lagos Island) will be shut. The inbound lane will stay open.

Motorists plying Apongbon and Ijora Olopa have been advised to use the Third Mainland Bridge as an alternative route. According to Kemi Filani News, “adequate traffic and security personnel will be deployed along alternative routes to guide motorists and ensure smooth traffic flow.”

Federal Government Probe Already Underway

The closure builds on an earlier directive from the Minister of Works, David Umahi, who ordered a 10-day probe into structural concerns on the Eko Bridge. The Guardian Nigeria reported that Umahi had raised alarms about the bridge’s integrity and directed engineers to carry out a thorough structural review before repairs begin.

The Eko Bridge is one of Lagos Island’s main access points, connecting the mainland to Lagos Island via Carter Bridge road. Its closure — even partial — will directly affect thousands of daily commuters, commercial drivers, and traders who depend on the route.

Expect Gridlock

Lagos traffic is already notoriously bad. A major bridge closure with no clear end date will pile more pressure on alternative routes, particularly the Third Mainland Bridge and Carter Bridge. Commuters heading into Lagos Island from Surulere, Apongbon, and Ijora areas should plan for significant delays starting Tuesday.

The state government says it is prioritizing safety over convenience — and given the scale of the structural concerns, that’s probably the right call. But for daily commuters, it’s going to be a rough few weeks, or longer.

Sources: Punch, Kemi Filani News, Guardian Nigeria

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Written by

Claudia Kane

General assignment reporter and News Editor at NaijaTrend. Covers breaking news, security, and national affairs across Nigeria.

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